In traditional Hollywood terms, director Joseph Kosinki's $200 million racing baby, F1: The Movie, is a sure winner.
With the epic cinematic wattage of both star Brad Pitt and charismatic "It Boy" Damson Idris, a solid script with a trusted and familiar arc, and thrilling racing footage that is hypnotic and dramatic, F1 is destined to be a crowd-pleaser that will easily recoup the money poured into this sprawling, globe-trotting production.
Pitt plays Sonny Hayes, a skilled itinerant racer who abandoned the circuit about 30 years before we meet him. A former team member / now team owner Ruben Cervantes (Javier Bardem) offers Sonny, who was prodigious in his 20's but is now living in a van, an opportunity to drive regularly for him and, perhaps, rekindle his youthful fire. Sonny responds with hesitation but agrees to help his old friend dig himself out of a financial pit by putting some wins on the board.
Sonny, now 60, partners with Idris' Joshua Pearce, a young and gifted driver who is not looking to be mentored by a "never was." The early interactions between the two is what we would expect in the world of motorsport, and the slow melting of the ice between them is the heart of the picture.
Kosinki puts all of the pieces in place -- including a potential romance with chief car designer Kate (the wonderful Kerry Condon of The Banshees of Inisherin) and lets the picture's swift pace carry viewers along, delivering the goods in the movie's inevitable standoff with one of the picture's producers, British F1 driver Lewis Hamilton, whose face appears on camera only briefly.
It is to Kosinski's credit that the film doesn't wander too far off the track -- even though a few cars do in several heart-stopping scenes -- so we never lose sight of the intensity of Sonny's quest for ... well, that's not entirely clear, but one thing we know, it's not about "the money."

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